A method for regulating a flow of energy from an input to an output of a power converter includes receiving a first signal representative of an output voltage, and receiving a second signal representative of a current of the power converter. An output current of the power converter is determined in response to at least one of the first and second signals. A power switch of the power converter is switched to regulate the output current of the power converter to a substantially constant output current value for a first range of power converter output voltages, to regulate an output power of the power converter to a substantially constant power value for a second range of power converter output voltages, and to regulate the output voltage of the power converter at substantially a highest output voltage value of the second range of power converter output voltages.
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1. A method for regulating a flow of energy from an input of a power converter to an output of the power converter, comprising:
receiving a first signal representative of an output voltage of the power converter;
receiving a second signal representative of a current of the power converter;
determining an output current of the power converter in response to at least one of the first and second signals;
switching a power switch of the power converter to regulate the output current of the power converter to a substantially constant output current value for a first range of power converter output voltages;
switching the power switch of the power converter to regulate an output power of the power converter to a substantially constant power value for a second range of power converter output voltages;
switching the power switch of the power converter to regulate the output voltage of the power converter at substantially a highest output voltage value of the second range of power converter output voltages for a range of power converter output current values;
adjusting the first range of power converter output voltages and the second range of power converter output voltages in response to an adjustment signal received at a terminal of a controller of the power converter.
15. A regulator circuit for use in a power converter, comprising:
a power switch; and
a controller coupled to the power switch, and coupled to receive a first signal representative of an output voltage of the power converter, a second signal representative a current of the power converter, and an adjustment signal received at a terminal of the controller, wherein the regulator circuit is coupled to determine the output voltage and an output current of the power converter in response to at least the first and second signals and the adjustment signal, wherein the controller is coupled to control a switching of the power switch to regulate the output current of the power converter to a substantially constant output current value for a first range of power converter output voltages, wherein the switching of the power switch is further coupled to regulate an output power of the power converter to a substantially constant power value for a second range of power converter output voltages, wherein the controller is coupled to adjust the first range of power converter output voltages and the second range of power converter output voltages in response to the adjustment signal, and wherein the switching of the power switch is further coupled to regulate the output voltage of the power converter at substantially a highest output voltage value of the second range of power converter output voltages for a range of power converter output current values.
9. A regulator circuit for use in a power converter, comprising:
a voltage regulation circuit coupled to receive a first signal representative of an output voltage at an output of the power converter, wherein the voltage regulation circuit is coupled to generate a third regulation signal in response to the first signal;
a current regulation circuit coupled to receive a second signal representative of a current of the power converter, wherein the current regulation circuit is coupled to determine an output current of the power converter in response to the second signal and generate a first regulation signal in response to the second signal;
a transition region regulation circuit coupled to receive the first signal, the second signal, and an adjustment signal received at a terminal of the regulation circuit, wherein the transition region regulation circuit is coupled to generate a second regulation signal in response to the first signal, the second signal, and the adjustment signal; and
a controller coupled to receive a feedback signal responsive to the first, second and third regulation signals, wherein the controller is coupled to generate a drive signal in response to the feedback signal to control a switching of a power switch of the power converter to regulate the output current of the power converter to a substantially constant output current value for a first range of power converter output voltages, wherein the switching of the power switch is further coupled to regulate an output power of the power converter to a substantially constant power value for a second range of power converter output voltages, wherein the controller is coupled to adjust the first range of power converter output voltages and the second range of power converter output voltages in response to the adjustment signal, and wherein the switching of the power switch is further coupled to regulate the output voltage of the power converter at substantially a highest output voltage value of the second range of power converter output voltages for a range of power converter output current values.
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1. Field of the Disclosure
The present invention relates generally to electronic circuits, and more specifically, the invention relates to switch mode power supplies.
2. Background
A common application for a switch mode power supply is a battery charger. The output power of a battery charger is usually controlled to provide regulated output voltage and regulated output current. The output voltage is regulated between a maximum and a minimum voltage over a range of output current. The output current is regulated between a maximum and a minimum current over a range of output voltage. A feedback signal is used to regulate the output of a switch mode power supply such that the output voltage and output current stay within the specified limits.
The switch mode power supply typically has a fault protection feature that prevents excessive output voltage and/or excessive output current in the absence of a feedback signal. Without this fault protection feature, the loss of the feedback signal could cause the output voltage and/or output current to go high enough to damage the output load (which could be a battery) and/or the switch mode power supply. With this fault protection feature, the absence of a feedback signal typically causes the switch mode power supply to operate in an auto-restart cycle that substantially reduces the average output voltage and/or output current until the feedback signal is restored.
A sustained attempt to take more power from the output than the battery charger can provide will prevent the power supply from regulating both output voltage and output current. The control circuit of the battery charger typically interprets a loss of regulation for more than a threshold time like an absence of feedback signal that triggers the fault protection feature.
Low cost circuits that regulate output current typically have loose tolerances. Battery chargers that use such circuits must guarantee a low value of a maximum output current at one end of the tolerance range, and they must guarantee no more than a high value of maximum output current at the other end of the tolerance range. The need to consider the addition of tolerances in other parameters can cause the design to be capable of substantially higher power than necessary. Failure to deliver all the power required by the load will cause the power supply to lose regulation and to enter a self-protection mode. Higher power capability typically requires a larger magnetic component or a larger power switch, which raises the cost of the power supply.
Battery chargers usually exhibit an abrupt transition between the regulated output voltage and the regulated output current. That is, the locus of output voltage and output current plotted in Cartesian coordinates usually has a sharp corner of approximately 90 degrees at the point of transition that corresponds to the point of maximum output power.
The typical practice of designing a battery charger with a sharp transition between the regulated output voltage and the regulated output current can result in a product that costs more than necessary to meet the requirements. A controlled regulated transition from a regulated output voltage to a regulated output current can allow the use of lower cost components.
Non-limiting and non-exhaustive embodiments of the present invention are described with reference to the following figures, wherein like reference numerals refer to like parts throughout the various views unless otherwise specified.
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding components throughout the several views of the drawings. Skilled artisans will appreciate that elements in the figures are illustrated for simplicity and clarity and have not necessarily been drawn to scale. For example, the dimensions of some of the elements in the figures may be exaggerated relative to other elements to help to improve understanding of various embodiments of the present invention. Also, common but well-understood elements that are useful or necessary in a commercially feasible embodiment are often not depicted in order to facilitate a less obstructed view of these various embodiments of the present invention.
In the following description, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. It will be apparent, however, to one having ordinary skill in the art that the specific detail need not be employed to practice the present invention. In other instances, well-known materials or methods have not been described in detail in order to avoid obscuring the present invention.
Reference throughout this specification to “one embodiment”, “an embodiment”, “one example” or “an example” means that a particular feature, structure or characteristic described in connection with the embodiment or example is included in at least one embodiment of the present invention. Thus, appearances of the phrases “in one embodiment”, “in an embodiment”, “one example” or “an example” in various places throughout this specification are not necessarily all referring to the same embodiment or example. Furthermore, the particular features, structures or characteristics may be combined in any suitable combinations and/or subcombinations in one or more embodiments or examples. Particular features, structures or characteristics may be included in an integrated circuit, an electronic circuit, a combinational logic circuit, or other suitable components that provide the described functionality. In addition, it is appreciated that the figures provided herewith are for explanation purposes to persons ordinarily skilled in the art and that the drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale.
Techniques are disclosed to provide a regulated transition between the regulated output voltage and regulated output current of a power supply, allowing a switch mode power supply to perform as a battery charger at a reduced cost. As will be discussed, it is possible to avoid the higher cost associated with higher than necessary power capability by using a regulated transition between the regulated output voltage and the regulated output current in accordance with the teachings of the present invention. The regulated transition maintains a feedback signal to avoid entering an auto-restart mode while it allows a reduction in the maximum power capability. The regulated transition may provide the power supply with a constant output power characteristic within a region of output voltage and output current. It is also possible to adjust voltage and current thresholds that define the boundaries of the regulated transition in response to signals received from a device that may use the power supply to charge a battery.
Every switched mode power supply has a maximum power capability that describes a boundary on the plot of output voltage and output current. In conventional designs, the maximum capability boundary is set beyond the point of maximum specified output power, which is the intersection of maximum specified output voltage and maximum specified output current. In embodiments of the present invention, the maximum capability boundary is set below the point of maximum specified output power, and uses a regulated transition between regulated output voltage and regulated output current to avoid loss of feedback signal that would cause the power supply to operate in a self-protection mode. As a result, the locus of output voltage and output current in the regulated transition can be made to follow a path below the maximum capability boundary to reduce the cost of the design according to embodiments of the present invention.
To illustrate,
In a typical switch mode power supply, a capability boundary 102 that describes maximum power capability of the power supply is set beyond the outer maximum power point 105 to guarantee regulated operation within the specified outer and inner boundaries 110 and 150 respectively. The use of a power switch with lower rated current or the use of an energy storage element that can store less energy can reduce the cost of the power supply, but these measures also reduce the maximum power capability of the power supply. The capability boundary for a reduced cost power supply can be within the boundaries of specified operation 110 and 150 as illustrated by the capability boundary 115 in accordance with the teachings of the present invention.
In
As shown in
The power supply operates along line segment 230 having slope mT in the regulated transition region of operation, to regulate output voltage and output current between a first transition point 255 at a first output transition voltage VT1 corresponding to a first output transition current IT1, and a second transition point 235 at second output transition voltage VT2 corresponding to a second output transition current IT2. Thus, in the illustrated example, the power supply operates in the regulated transition region of operation along line segment 230 and restricts the voltage and current to be less than the maximum power capability of the power supply with slope mT when the output current of the power supply is between first output transition current IT1 and the second output transition current IT2 and/or when the output voltage of the power supply is between first output transition voltage VT1 and the second output transition voltage VT2. The power supply operates along line segment 240 having slope mI in the regulated current region of operation to regulate output current between IT2 at the second transition point 235 and short circuit current ISC at zero output voltage. Thus, in the illustrated example, the power supply operates in the regulated current region of operation along line segment 240 with slope mI when the output voltage of the power supply is less than the second output transition voltage VT2.
In one example, it is appreciated that a first output voltage VO range from 0 to VT2, in which the power supply operates in the regulated current region, plus a second output voltage VO range from VT2 to VT1, in which the power supply operates in the regulated transition region, is substantially constant. When operating in the regulated voltage region, it is noted that the power supply is operating with the output voltage VO at substantially the highest output voltage value of the second output voltage VO range from VT2 to VT1, as illustrated in
The power supply with the output characteristic illustrated in
The power supply with the output characteristic 300 illustrated in
The power supply operates along line segment 340 having slope mI in the regulated current region of operation to regulate output current between IT2 at the second transition point 335 and third transition point 345 at a third output transition voltage VT3 corresponding to a third output transition current IT3.
When the power supply is operating in the constant current region and the output voltage becomes less than VT3, the power supply enters a foldback region of operation where further reduction in the output voltage results in a reduction in output current. In the foldback region of operation illustrated in
For embodiments of the present invention, simultaneous regulation of output voltage and output current allows a power supply with reduced power capability to satisfy requirements of battery chargers at lower cost than traditional designs. A regulated transition region between a voltage regulation region and a current regulation region allows the power supply to operate below the boundary of its maximum power capability. Signals from a voltage regulation circuit, a current regulation circuit, and a regulated transition circuit are summed to obtain a regulated transition region of the desired shape. Switch mode power supplies that operate with a regulated transition region can use smaller components to reduce the cost of power supply applications such as for example battery chargers or the like in accordance with the teachings of the present invention.
As shown in
The input voltage HVIN 404 is coupled to an energy transfer element T1 410 and a power switch SW1 452. In the illustration of
In the example of
In the example of
A switch controller circuit 450 switches the primary power switch SW1 452 on and off in response a feedback signal SFB 448 in accordance with the teachings of the present invention to regulate the output of the switched mode power supply. In addition to feedback signal SFB 448, the switch controller circuit 450 may receive a current sense signal 460 representative of the current IP 462 in the primary power switch SW1 452. The switch controller circuit 450 may also receive external system inputs 466 such as temperature information so that it may adjust the regulation of the output power of the power supply in response to temperatures. For one embodiment, primary power switch SW1 452 is a transistor. For one embodiment, primary power switch SW1 452 is a power metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistor (MOSFET). For one embodiment, the switch controller circuit 450 includes either an integrated circuit or discrete electrical components or both an integrated circuit and discrete electrical components. For one embodiment, an integrated circuit includes switch controller circuit 450 and primary power switch SW1 452.
The operation of primary power switch SW1 452 produces pulsating current IP 462 in the primary winding 408 of energy transfer element T1 410 to produce a pulsating current in secondary winding 412. Pulsating current in secondary winding 412 of energy transfer element T1 410 is rectified by a diode D1 414 and is filtered by a capacitor C1 416 to produce a substantially constant output that may be an output voltage VO 418 or a substantially constant output current IO 419 or a combination of output VO 418 and IO 419 to the load 420.
As shown in
In the example of
Signal separator circuit 436 receives the voltage from the voltage divider network to provide a sensed input voltage and a sensed output voltage to the control circuits on the input side of the power supply. In one embodiment, signal separator circuit 436 includes a diode to provide a voltage sense signal 438 that is representative of the output voltage VO 418. In one embodiment, not shown in
In one embodiment, signal separator circuit 436 may receive an adjustment input 468 to scale the value of the voltage sense signal 438 so that the output voltage may be set to a desired value. The adjustment input 468 may be an analog or a digital signal that may come from a battery-powered device that uses the output of the power supply to charge its battery. In one example, the adjustment input 468 may be received at a terminal of a controller of the power converter. In another example, the adjustment input 468 may be received at one or more terminals coupled to the output of the power converter. In yet another example, the terminals may be dedicated to data signals. In yet another example, the adjustment may be received as a coded sequence of steps in the value of load the 420.
In the example of
Current sense signal 460 may be used by various circuits on the input side of the power supply for protection and control. Besides protecting the primary power switch SW1 452 from excess current, circuits on the input side of the power supply may extract information from current sense signal 460 to control output current IO 419 as well as the current from the unregulated input source HVIN 404. For instance, in one example it is appreciated that the sensed switch current may be processed in combination with input voltage sense and output voltage sense and/or timing quantities as indicated by signal 472 from the voltage divider network to provide constant output current in a flyback power supply. In another example, it is appreciated that the sensed switch current may be used to control input current to achieve a high power factor while maintaining a constant output current in a flyback power supply. In various examples the output current IO 419 can be determined in response to voltage sense signal 438 and the current sense signal 460. In other examples, it is appreciated that the output current IO 419 may be determined by measuring the output current IO 419 directly.
In the example of
In the example of
For one embodiment, feedback signal SFB 448 is a function of, or is responsive to, a current regulation signal S1 454 from current regulation circuit 458, a transition region regulation signal S2 442 from a transition regulation circuit 440, and a voltage regulation signal S3 444 from a voltage regulation circuit 446. For one embodiment, a signal combiner 456 combines regulation signal S1 454, regulation signal S2 442, and regulation signal S3 444 to provide the combined feedback signal SFB 448 received by the switch controller circuit 450. In one embodiment, signal combiner 456 may be a summation circuit. In another embodiment, signal combiner 456 may be a circuit that multiplies two or more signals.
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that a signal separator circuit 436, a transition region regulation circuit 440, a voltage regulation circuit 446, a current regulation circuit 458, a signal combiner circuit 456, a switch controller circuit 450, a primary power switch SW1 452 with current sensing capability may be either included in an integrated circuit or assembled from multiple integrated circuits into a controller 428 for a power supply with transition region regulation.
For embodiments of the present invention, transition region regulation circuit 440 provides regulated operation of the power supply with feedback in the transition region of operation for example along line segments 130 of
In one example, feedback signal SFB 448 may be a current. If current regulation signal S1 454, transition region regulation signal S2 442, and voltage regulation signal S3 444 are also currents, then the signal combiner circuit 456 may be a summation circuit, and the summation circuit may be just a node. For instance, in one example, current regulation circuit 458 is coupled to compare current sense signal 460 with a current reference signal and produce a current for regulation signal S1 454 in response to the difference between the current sense signal 460 and the current reference signal. In one example, voltage regulation circuit 446 is coupled to compare voltage sense signal 438 a voltage reference signal and produce a current for regulation signal S3 444 in response to the difference between the voltage sense signal 438 and the voltage reference signal. In one example, transition region regulation circuit 440 is coupled to compare a combination of voltage sense signal 438 and current sense signal 460 in response to adjustment input 468, and compare the combination with a transition region reference signal and produce a current for regulation signal S2 442. In an example in which signal combiner circuit 456 is a node, all three currents for regulation signal S1 454, regulation signal S2 441, and regulation signal S3 444 are combined at the node in signal combiner circuit 456 to produce feedback signal SFB 448, which is coupled to be received by switch controller 450.
As mentioned above, transition region regulation circuit 440 receives voltage sense signal 438, current sense signal 460, and an adjustment input 468 in the example depicted in
The power supply with the output characteristic illustrated in
Independent adjustment of the first transition point 555 and the second transition point 535 may select a linear regulated transition characteristic within the region bounded by line segments 573 and 583 with a slope mT defined by first and second transition points.
In the regulated current region of operation, the power supply operates along line segment 540 having slope mI to regulate output current between IT2 at the second transition point 535 and third transition point 565 at a third output transition voltage VT3 corresponding to a third output transition current IT3.
When the power supply is operating in the constant current region and the output voltage becomes less than VT3, the power supply enters a foldback region of operation where further reduction in the output voltage results in a reduction in output current. In the foldback region of operation illustrated in
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that it is not necessary for a regulated transition region to have a linear characteristic with a constant slope mT. In some applications it may desirable for the output of a power supply to have a regulated transition region with a constant power characteristic. A constant power characteristic maintains a relatively constant value for the product of output voltage and output current.
It is appreciated also that a constant power characteristic may be approximated by multiple linear segments. To illustrate,
After starting in block 805, the controller for the power supply receives adjustment inputs and external system inputs in block 810. The adjustment inputs may be in the form of an analog or a digital communication from a battery-powered device that uses the power supply to charge its battery. The external system inputs may be in the form of an electrical signal or a value of a physical parameter such as for example an electrical resistance that changes in response to temperature.
Next, in block 815 the controller for the power supply senses the input voltage, the output voltage, and the pulsating current in a primary switch. Then in block 820 the controller computes the output current from the sensed quantities.
From the computed output current and the sensed output voltage the controller generates a current regulation signal S1, a transition region regulation signal S2, and an output voltage regulation signal S3 in blocks 825, 830, and 835 respectively. The controller then generates a feedback signal SFB that is a combination, or a function, of S1, S2 and S3 in block 840. A switch controller operates the primary switch in response to the feedback signal SFB in block 845. The process continues by returning to block 810.
The above description of illustrated examples of the present invention, including what is described in the Abstract, are not intended to be exhaustive or to be limitation to the precise forms disclosed. While specific embodiments of, and examples for, the invention are described herein for illustrative purposes, various equivalent modifications are possible without departing from the broader spirit and scope of the present invention. Indeed, it is appreciated that the specific example voltages, currents, frequencies, power range values, times, etc., are provided for explanation purposes and that other values may also be employed in other embodiments and examples in accordance with the teachings of the present invention.
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